The document discusses the importance of disability income planning and insurance. It notes that most people do not realize how much income they are expected to earn over their careers. It then highlights the risks of disability and average durations. The rest of the document provides examples of sources of funds during a disability, and suggests that disability income insurance can help replace income and maintain lifestyle. It includes a checklist for evaluating disability income policy features and benefits. The final pages provide a disability income action plan.
2. Your Earning Power
2Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
$ 50,000 $ 100,000 $ 250,000 $ 500,000
$ 2,000,000 $ 4,000,000 $ 10,000,000 $ 20,000,000
$ 1,500,000 $ 3,000,000 $ 7,500,000 $ 15,000,000
$ 1,000,000 $ 2,000,000 $ 5,000,000 $ 10,000,000
$ 500,000 $ 1,000,000 $ 2,500,000 $ 5,000,000
$ 250,000 $ 500,000 $ 1,250,000 $ 2,500,000
Your Future Earning Power
If Your Family Income Averages:
Years to
Age 65:
40
30
20
10
5
If you are sick or
hurt and unable to
work, how will you
replace your
income?
Few people realize that a 30-year-old couple will earn
3.5 million dollars by age 65 if their total family income
averages $100,000 for their entire careers, without
any raises.
Your Income
Spouse’s Income
Other Income
Investment Income
Your ability to earn an income is your most valuable asset.
3. Is This a Gamble You Want to Take?
3Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
Risk of Disability for 3 Months or Longer
versus Risk of Death*
* Source: 1985 Commissioners Individual Disability Table A (NOTE: The 1985 CIDA is the most current morbidity table available
for individual disability claim experience and is in use by many State Insurance Departments.)
** Source: Get Sick, Get Out: The Medical Causes of Home Mortgage Foreclosure, Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine, Vol.
18, No. 65, 2008 (last revised June 12, 2009)
Average Duration of a Disability Lasting Over 3
Months Prior to Age 65*
According to a study published in Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine, "half of all foreclosures have
medical causes.“ In addition, based on this study of homeowners going through foreclosures, "half of all
respondents (49%) indicated that their foreclosure was caused in part by a medical problem, including
illness or injuries (32%), unmanageable medical bills (23%), lost work due to a medical problem (27%), or
caring for sick family members (14%).“**
4. Did You Know...
4Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
?More than one in three (83 million) Americans currently live with one
or more types of cardiovascular disease. Heart disease and stroke are
among the leading causes of disability in the U.S. workforce, with
nearly four million people reporting disability from these causes.*
* Source: Addressing the Nation’s Leading Killers, 2011; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
** Source: Heart Disease Fact Sheet /Stroke Fact Sheet – 2012 Updates; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
*** Source: 2012 Cancer Facts and Figures; American Cancer Society
**** Source: 2011 Motor Vehicle Crashes: Overview; National Highway Traffic Safety Administration: December 2012
About every 34 seconds an American will suffer a heart attack.**
Stroke is a leading cause of serious, long-term disability in the United States...on average,
every 40 seconds someone in the U.S. has a stroke.**
In the U.S., men have a slightly less than a 1 in 2 lifetime risk of developing some form of
cancer; for women, the risk is a little more than 1 in 3.***
Many people now survive a serious illness that would have been fatal in the past. For
example, improvements in cancer diagnosis and treatment have improved the 5-year relative
survival rate for all cancers diagnosed between 2001 and 2007 to 67%, up from 49% in 1975 –
1977.***
In 2011, an estimated 2.22 million people were injured in motor vehicle accidents in the
United States.****
5. What Can Happen If Disability Strikes?
5Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
Today, income
covers expenses. BUT Disability means lower income, higher expenses.
Income
Expenses
Debt
Exposure
Disability Strikes
How will you meet the expenses of a disability, just
at the time your income ceases?
6. Sources of Funds to Replace Income During a Disability
6Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
If you save 10% of your income each year, it will take 10 years to set aside just one year’s
income
What creditor is going to lend money to a disabled income earner?
Assuming a market exists, a forced liquidation of assets can reduce their value. A single
disability could consume the assets you’ve worked a lifetime to accumulate.
Your lifestyle may already be built upon a dual income. If, however, your spouse is not
currently an income earner, is it realistic to assume that he or she could replace your
earning power?
It can be difficult to qualify for Social Security disability benefits. In fact, from 2001
through 2010, an average of about only 45% of Social Security disability claims were
eventually approved. Assuming, however, that you do qualify, Social Security benefits do
not begin until the sixth full month of disability and are generally not adequate to replace
your earning power. In fact, the average monthly Social Security disability benefit
received in 2011 was $1,111. (Source: Annual Statistical Report on the Social Security
Disability Program, 2011; released July 2012)
Savings
Borrow
Liquidate
Assets
Spouse’s
Earnings
Social
Security
Benefits
There is, however, a possible solution...
What Sources of Funds May Be Available to Replace Your Income During a Disability?
7. A Potential Solution Using Disability Income Insurance
7Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
An adequate amount of personally-owned disability income
insurance, coordinated with other sources of income, can
guarantee a source of income in the event of serious illness
or injury.
Individual Insurance
Company
If Disabled, Income Tax-
Free Disability Income Benefits
Non-deductible Disability Income
Insurance Premiums
Finally, since the premiums paid for personally-owned
disability income insurance are not tax deductible, the
benefits are not considered as income and are received
100% free of income tax.
Personally-owned
disability income insurance
benefits can be used to:
preserve your independence.
maintain your lifestyle.
give you time to recover and,
if necessary, retrain.
protect your assets from
liquidation.
maintain your personal
savings for other uses.
8. Disability Income Insurance Checklist
8Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
With disability income insurance, you are purchasing a stream of income to be delivered to you by
an insurance company in the event you become disabled. The policy features and benefits should
be coordinated with your needs and premium-paying ability. As you evaluate disability income
policy features and benefits, remember that the choices you make will impact the premiums you
pay and the benefits you are entitled to receive.
continued on next slide
Benefit Amount What is the monthly disability income benefit?
Waiting Period
For how long must you be disabled before the benefit begins? Common waiting
periods are 60, 90, 180, 365 or 730 consecutive days of disability.
Benefit Period
For how long will benefits be paid? Common benefit periods are one year, two
years, five years and to age 65.
Definition of Total
Disability
What definition of total disability must be met for benefits to be payable? The
definition of total disability can range from the inability to perform your own
occupation to the inability to work in any reasonable occupation based on your
education, training and experience. This is an important policy provision to
evaluate.
9. Disability Income Insurance Checklist
9Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
Partial Disability
Benefit
Will the policy provide benefits for partial disability following a period of total
disability? If so, how much and for how long? What requirements must be met?
Rehabilitation
Benefits
Does the policy pay any of the expenses of a rehabilitation program during a
period of disability?
Waiver of
Premium
Will policy premiums be waived during a disability?
Renewability
Is the policy guaranteed renewable? Under what conditions can premiums be
increased?
Other Benefits to
Consider
Other available benefits may include:
Additional Purchase Option: Right to purchase additional disability income
protection without evidence of insurability.
Social Security Rider: Coordinates with an expected Social Security disability
benefit.
Cost of Living Rider: In the event of disability, increases the disability benefit
each year to compensate for increases in the cost of living.
10. Disability Income Action Checklist
10Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review
Estimate the income you will need in the event of
disability.
Estimate the disability income that will be available to
you from sources such as:
The Analysis… To Implement a Disability
Income Insurance Plan…
Select type of policy and
amount of personally-owned
disability income insurance.
Evaluate and select appropriate
optional benefits.
Establish insurability.
Arrange for payment of
premiums.
Determine the additional monthly income required to
achieve your disability income objective.
Employer-Provided Short- and Long-Term Disability
Benefits
Social Security (submit Form SSA-7004 to the Social
Security Administration in order to receive an
“Earnings and Benefit Statement”)
Other Government-Provided Disability Benefits
Other Sources of Income (e.g., CDs, savings
accounts, mutual funds)
11. You Can Manage Your Finances
Preparing for Disability: A Disability Income Review 11
“It’s by managing your finances that you write the story
of your life. You are both the author and the story’s
principal character.
Resolve to perform what you ought.”
-- Benjamin Franklin